Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 2, 2017
Hillary Wonka and the Nastiness Factory
Now this bitch is planning to bring the whole world down with her.
I’m glad she’s staying in the public eye though. People hate her so, so much, on both sides, and it is really demoralizing for the Democrats/liberals to have her hanging around.
Hillary Clinton is moving back into the spotlight as the vanquished Democratic presidential nominee seeks to carve out her role during the Trump administration.
It’s a step she’s taking cautiously after stepping away from the political arena for roughly two months at the urging of her friends and associates. During that time, she emerged in public only for an occasional speech or college appearance.
But March represented a turning point as Clinton ratcheted up her opposition to Trump on Twitter and made three public speeches.
With her new rallying cry of “Resist, persist, insist, enlist,” Clinton is keeping up her fight against Trump while giving Democrats space to find a new person to carry the torch in 2020.
What a stupid phrase.
This is “Donald Ducking his taxes” stupid.
Hillary lost the fight against Donald Trump.
“She’s always been someone who gets out there and fights for what she thinks is right,” one former Clinton campaign staffer told The Hill.
“She’s striking an appropriate balance. She still has an appreciation that she’s not the face of the Democratic Party and people don’t want her to be … but having worked for her and having seen how hard she fights, I’d be disappointed if she spent the rest of her career in the woods.”
I want her to be the face of the Democrat Party.
Her or Elizabeth Warren.
For a politician who held White House aspirations for years, Clinton’s November loss — which came despite a victory in the popular vote — likely weighed heavy.
In the months after 2008 primary loss to then-Sen. Barack Obama, Clinton quickly reemerged first on the stump and then as Obama’s secretary of State.
But 2016 was different.
After her defeat, she receded back into private life. Clinton sightings became rare, with her picture occasionally taken by people who stumbled upon her during walks in the woods near her Chappaqua, N.Y. home.
A confidant familiar with Clinton’s thinking said her biggest concern coming out of the November election was party unification. To that point, she has spent some time in recent weeks talking to millennials, activists and others who are working to keep Democratic Party strong, a source close to Clinton said.
At the same time, she has stepped into the fray to criticize Trump on hot-button issues like the travel ban and healthcare.
During each of Clinton’s speeches in March, she slowly waded further and further back into the political pool.
On St. Patrick’s Day in Pennsylvania, she told the Society of Irish Woman audience that she’s “ready to come out of the woods.”
Too bad Tay-Tay won’t let you play her songs, bitch!
Earlier this week, she debuted her “resist, insist, persist enlist” slogan.
And then on Friday at Georgetown University, she blasted Trump’s proposed cuts to the State Department and international aid as “ a grave mistake for our country.”
Yeah, because government excess and borrowing money from China to give it to… China are both super-popular positions.
While still not mentioning Trump by name, she jabbed at the president by joking about her reliance on “evidence and facts.” And she delivered another barb directed at White House counselor Kellyanne Conway based on the Trump aides use of the infamous term “alternative facts.”
Yeah, evidence and facts. Except that time she accused Alex Jones of working for Vladimir Putin.
Clinton has told friends that she feels an obligation to speak for those who helped her carry the popular vote just five months ago.
“This is her way of giving those people a voice and keeping her promise to them that she wouldn’t just go away,” the adviser said.
With the presidential campaign in her rearview mirror, “she feels like she has a little more freedom to speak out and not worry about the implications,” another confidant said.
Prominent Democrats who supported Clinton during the campaign told The Hill that they are encouraged by her new approach.
“Sec. Clinton is one of the foremost thinkers of our time. … Most definitely she should be fully in the midst of the conversation,” Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), who ran the Democratic National Committee during the presidential primary but resigned after the leak of emails showing some staffers advocating for Clinton, told The Hill.
“At right and necessary times, there’s no question she can be a tremendous asset to us both in planning policy decisions but also as a voice of leadership.”
Rep. Joaquin Castro (R-Texas) agreed, adding that he “hope[s] she’ll continue to speak up.”
…
While she hasn’t ruled anything about her future steps, friends say she “has been gathering feedback for weeks on how she can be most helpful,” in rebuilding the party and on specific issues, said one longtime adviser who has spoken to Clinton in recent days.
“She can’t sit still,” the adviser said. “There’s no clear leader in the party. Bernie certainly hasn’t stepped up. So what does she have to lose now?”
This is the story of a bitch who just simply would not go away…
I think she should run in 2020.